We get fully paginated NHL and MLB stats, and a NASCAR page once a week right now. The person handling those right now is Harold Hersch, I believe. Fully paginated news pages? Can't see the attraction on an individual market basis

There is an immediate opening for a pagination specialist at The Canadian Press. This is a temporary position while we assess the potential benefit of adding paginated newspaper pages to our line of news products. We expect the position to last six months, with the possibility it will become permanent or lead to other editorial work in the future.

The pagination specialist will lead the production of paginated newspaper pages. Our initial product will be pages of sports results, using templates.

Some of you already have cited AP pages that are jst like this.
Where does it say anything about entire NEWS pages? It say notrhig about ads.

There is an immediate opening for a pagination specialist at The Canadian Press. This is a temporary position while we assess the potential benefit of adding paginated newspaper pages to our line of news products. We expect the position to last six months, with the possibility it will become permanent or lead to other editorial work in the future.

The pagination specialist will lead the production of paginated newspaper pages. Our initial product will be pages of sports results, using templates.

Some of you already have cited AP pages that are jst like this.
Where does it say anything about entire NEWS pages? It say notrhig about ads.

Read the damn link.

Click to expand...

I did read it. Did you?
What the fuck do you think a PAGINATED PAGE consists of? To me, it's a DONE PAGE. Whether it has an ad on it or not, it's a completed product. I don't know what paginated means to you, but that's how I see it.

And it's not as if papers don't run "National" pages or "World" pages. So who is to say CP doesn't design and PAGINATE an entire "wide open page" of stories of national or world interest, and Joe Publisher says, "Hmm, that's easier and cheaper than asking someone on the desk to A) decide which stories to run, B) edit said stories to fit, and C) then lay them out.